Robert Lockwood, Jr., also known as Robert Junior Lockwood, (March 27, 1915 – November 21, 2006) was an
American blues guitarist who recorded for Chess Records among other Chicago labels in the 1950s and 1960s.
He is best known as a longtime collaborator with Sonny Boy Williamson II, and for his work in the mid 1950s
with Little Walter Jacobs.
Robert Lockwood was born in Turkey Scratch, a hamlet west of Helena, Arkansas. He started playing the
organ in his father's church at the age of 8. The famous bluesman Robert Johnson lived with Lockwood's
mother for 10 years off and on after his parents' divorce. Lockwood learned from Johnson not only how to play
guitar, but timing and stage presence as well. Because of his personal and professional association with the
music of Robert Johnson, he became known as "Robert Junior" Lockwood, a nickname by which he was known
among fellow musicians for the rest of his life, although he later frequently professed his dislike for this
appellation.
By age 15, Lockwood was playing professionally at parties in the Helena area. He often played with his quasi-
stepfather figure, Robert Johnson, also occasionally with Rice Miller (Sonny Boy Williamson II) or Johnny
Shines. Lockwood played at fish fries, juke joints, and street corners throughout the Mississippi Delta in the
1930s. An anecdote from Lockwood's website claims that on one occasion Robert Johnson played on one side
of the Sunflower River, while Lockwood played on the other, with the people of Clarksdale, Mississippi milling
about the bridge, supposedly unable to tell which guitarist was the real Robert Johnson.
Lockwood played with Sonny Boy Williamson II (Rice Miller) in the Clarksdale, Mississippi area in 1938 and 1939. He also played with Howlin' Wolf
and others in Memphis, Tennessee around 1938. From 1939 to 1940 he split his time playing in St. Louis, Missouri, Chicago, Illinois and Helena.
In 1941, Lockwood made his first recordings with Doctor Clayton for the Bluebird label in Aurora, Illinois. During these same sessions, he also
recorded the four songs which were released as the first two singles under his own name, which were early versions of his staple repertoire. These
recordings were released as 78s on Bluebird Records.
Also in 1941, Lockwood and Williamson were featured on the first King Biscuit Time radio program on KFFA in Helena. For several years in the early
1940s the pair played together in and around Helena and continued to be associated with King Biscuit Time. From about 1944 to 1949 Lockwood
played in West Memphis, Arkansas, St. Louis, Chicago and Memphis. Lockwood was an early influence of B. B. King and played with King's band
during his early career in Memphis.
In 1950 Lockwood settled in Chicago. In 1954 he replaced Louis Myers as guitarist in Little Walter's band, and played on Walter's #1 hit record "My
Babe" in 1955. He left Little Walter's band shortly thereafter, and in the late '50s recorded several sessions with Sonny Boy Williamson II for Chess
Records, sessions which also included Willie Dixon and Otis Spann. Lockwood also performed and/or recorded with Sunnyland Slim, Eddie Boyd, and
Muddy Waters among others.
In 1961 Lockwood moved with his wife to her hometown of Cleveland, Ohio where he resided until his death. In the early 1960s, as "Bob Lockwood,
Jr., and Combo," he had a regular gig at Loving's Grill, located at 8426 Hough Avenue. In the 1970s through the 1990s, he performed regularly with
his band the "All Stars" at numerous local venues, including Pirate's Cove, The Euclid Tavern, and Peabody's. For the last few years of his career,
Lockwood played at Cleveland's Fat Fish Blue (corner of Prospect and Ontario, downtown Cleveland) every Wednesday night at 8 p.m.; the "All
Stars" have continued to perform there after his death.
His Cleveland period also saw the release of some of his most noteworthy studio recordings as a band leader, first with a pair of albums playing
solo and with his band of the time on the Trix Records label, and then with Johnny Shines for two LP's on the Rounder label. The latter showed both
men determinedly playing the music they were interested in, rather than the familiar requests of the blues audience - an attitude Lockwood
maintained. Although he seldom performed without his band, he also recorded a solo album of his own material, along with a few Robert Johnson
standards, under the title Plays Robert and Robert. Lockwood has dealt briskly, sometimes brusquely, with the Johnson legend. It's typical that
when he gave one of his infrequent album recitals of Johnson songs, for Plays Robert and Robert (1983), he puckishly chose to use a 12-string
guitar
In 2004, Lockwood appeared at Eric Clapton's first Crossroads Guitar Festival in Dallas, Texas. A live recording with three other blues musicians in
Dallas in October 2004 – Last of the Great Mississippi Delta Bluesmen: Live In Dallas – was awarded a Grammy for Best Traditional Blues Album. or
the late Henry Townsend and Robert Lockwood Jr. It was the first Grammy win for the musicians. His last known recording session was carried out
at Ante Up Audio studios in Cleveland; where he performed on the album The Way Things Go, with long time collaborator Cleveland Fats for
Honeybee Entertainment.
Lockwood died at the age of 91 in Cleveland, having earlier suffered a cerebral aneurysm and a stroke. Lockwood is buried at Riverside Cemetery
in Cleveland, Ohio.
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